Eastern Eye (UK)

India says digital money being used to fund terror

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DIGITAL currencies need more regulation to stamp out funding for terror operations, India’s prime minister Narendra Modi said last Friday (18) at a major internatio­nal forum to combat financing of extremist groups.

India has laboured to rein in cryptocurr­ency transactio­ns after years of phenomenal growth, backed by burgeoning local trading platforms and glitzy celebrity endorsemen­ts.

Modi last year said that bitcoin presented a risk to younger generation­s and could “spoil our youth” if it ended up “in the wrong hands”.

He went further and told delegates last Friday at the Conference on Countering Financing of Terrorism that “private currencies” posed a grave security risk.

“New kinds of technology are being used for terror funding and recruitmen­t. Challenges from the dark net, private currencies and more are emerging,” Modi said. “There is a need for a uniform understand­ing for new finance technologi­es,” he added.

“From a uniform understand­ing, a unified system of checks and balances and regulation can emerge.”

Delegates from dozens of countries are in New Delhi for the two-day conference, which follows a special session of the UN’s Counter Terrorism Committee held in India last month.

Cryptocurr­encies have been under the scrutiny of Indian regulators since first entering the local market nearly a decade ago, with a surge in fraudulent transactio­ns leading to a central bank ban in 2018.

India’s Supreme Court lifted the restrictio­ns two years later and the market surged, growing by nearly 650 per cent in the year to June 2021, second only to Vietnam, according to research by Chainalysi­s.

The government also proposed banning “all private cryptocurr­encies”, but held back and later taxed profits from “private currencies” at 30 per cent. Globally, the crypto market has been thrown into upheaval by this month’s collapse of FTX, a major exchange for digital transactio­ns.

 ?? ?? CHALLENGES: Cryptocurr­encies were banned by the central bank in 2018, but the curbs were lifted in 2020 by the Supreme Court
CHALLENGES: Cryptocurr­encies were banned by the central bank in 2018, but the curbs were lifted in 2020 by the Supreme Court

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